3 Questions: The Climate Project at MIT
Richard Lester describes an emerging new initiative that will back climate efforts at the Institute and find outside partnerships to drive actionable innovation.
Richard Lester describes an emerging new initiative that will back climate efforts at the Institute and find outside partnerships to drive actionable innovation.
MIT delegates share observations and insights from the largest-ever UN climate conference.
Dermatologists and general practitioners are somewhat less accurate in diagnosing disease in darker skin, a new study finds. Used correctly, AI may be able to help.
For 14 years, Crayton has strengthened programs and created new ones that foster academic success, provide mentoring, prepare students for careers or graduate school, and build community.
Their new technique can produce furniture-sized aluminum parts in only minutes.
Atacama Biomaterials, co-founded by Paloma Gonzalez-Rojas SM ’15, PhD ’21, combines architecture, machine learning, and chemical engineering to create eco-friendly materials.
“We feel fortunate to have worked alongside Elise and to have witnessed the remarkable person she was.”
The MIT First Generation/Low Income Program provides undergraduates with community, resources, and support as they navigate MIT.
Ian Waitz describes the three-year contract that will change and enhance MIT’s graduate student policies and procedures.
Five multimedia projects communicating climate futures selected for 2023 WORLDING program, online and at MIT.
The MIT Summer Research Program pairs underrepresented students with opportunities to examine inequity through the IDSS Initiative for Combatting Systemic Racism.
Kwesi Afrifa, a senior majoring in urban planning and computer science, wants to create cultural hubs that are inviting to everyone.
Pedro Reynolds-Cuéllar, a doctoral candidate in media arts and sciences and a MAD Design Fellow, researches how technology and tradition intersect in rural spaces, particularly in Colombia.
An MIT panel charts how artificial intelligence will impact art and design.
Associate Professor David Hsu examines how people and cities can fight climate change locally — and how MIT can do the same.